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A systems-approach to NAD+ restoration

Nichola J. Conlon, Dianne Ford

Biochemical Pharmacology · 2022 · ▲ 40 citations

Abstract

A decline in NAD+ is a feature of ageing and may play a causal role in the process. NAD+ plays a pivotal role in myriad processes important in cellular metabolism and is a cosubstrate for enzymes that play key roles in pathways that modify ageing. Thus, interventions that increase NAD+ may slow aspects of the ageing trajectory and there is great interest in pharmacological NAD+ restoration. Dietary supplementation with NAD+ precursors, particularly nicotinamide riboside, has increased NAD+ levels in several human intervention studies and arguably been the most robust approach to date. However, consistency and reliability of such approaches to increase NAD+, and also impact on markers of efficacy to slow or reverse features of ageing, has been inconsistent. We argue that a major element of this variability may arise from the use of single-target approaches that do not consider the underlying biological complexity leading to NAD+ decline. Thus, a systems approach - targeting multiple key nodes in the NAD+ interactome - is likely to be more efficacious and reliable.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1016/j.bcp.2022.114946
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2026-06-16 MST

Cite this

APA
Conlon, N.J., &amp; Ford, D. (2022). A systems-approach to NAD+ restoration. <em>Biochemical Pharmacology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2022.114946
Vancouver
Conlon NJ, Ford D. A systems-approach to NAD+ restoration. Biochemical Pharmacology. 2022. doi:10.1016/j.bcp.2022.114946.
BibTeX
@article{nichola2022Asyste, title = {A systems-approach to NAD+ restoration}, author = {Nichola J. Conlon and Dianne Ford}, journal = {Biochemical Pharmacology}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.1016/j.bcp.2022.114946}, }

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